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Dr. Nathan Sammons, Associate Professor of Biology Two Complementary Strategies for Increasing Content Retention.

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Presentation on theme: "Dr. Nathan Sammons, Associate Professor of Biology Two Complementary Strategies for Increasing Content Retention."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dr. Nathan Sammons, Associate Professor of Biology Two Complementary Strategies for Increasing Content Retention

2 Desirable difficulties Robert Bjork (1994) 1. Introducing certain difficulties into the learning process can greatly improve long- term retention of the learned material The point is to increase the challenge, not frustrate the student Spacing out the material 2,3 Testing not restudying 4 Make students generate material 5 Vary the surroundings 6 Less clearly organized 7 Fonts which are hard to read 8

3 Desirable difficulties We often seek to eliminate difficulties in learning To our own detriment! Retrieval strengthStorage strength short-termLong-term “ Access to content which is easy isn’t as enriching as harder-earned content ” --McNamara et al., 1996

4 Biological Molecules: Beta testing my Desirable Difficulties activity Students in BIOL 1201 struggle with identifying molecular structure of biological molecules 15 mins: Learn to classify exemplar molecules into one of four categories

5 Biological Molecules: Prequiz

6 H H H H H H O OP OH C C C C C iClicker quiz – Question 1 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

7 iClicker quiz – Question 2 C O C H N H H H N N H H C C O C H H CH 2 O C O SH CH 3 CH 2 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

8 iClicker quiz – Question 3 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

9 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins iClicker quiz – Question 4

10 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins iClicker quiz – Question 5

11 Biological Molecules: Sort into 4 categories

12 Biological Molecules: Proteins CarbohydratesLipids Nucleic acids

13 Biological Molecules Challenge: First team to bring me perfectly classified molecules wins! +

14 Biological Molecules: Postquiz

15 H H H H H H O OP OH C C C C C iClicker quiz – Question 1 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

16 iClicker quiz – Question 2 C O C H N H H H N N H H C C O C H H CH 2 O C O SH CH 3 CH 2 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

17 iClicker quiz – Question 3 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins

18 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins iClicker quiz – Question 4

19 To which class of biological molecules does this belong? A.Carbohydrates B.Lipids C.Nucleic Acids D.Proteins iClicker quiz – Question 5

20 Competitive gaming is…. Fun Exciting Engaging Interesting AddictingMotivating?

21 Competitive gaming is successful because it is: TopHat Active learning Desirably difficult Cues in on competitive side of personalities (intrinsic motivation)

22 Competitive gaming is successful because it is: TopHat

23 1.First person has 2 minutes to describe their challenge 2.Others have 2 minutes to ask questions 3.Others have 2 minutes to talk about challenge while the first listens Discussion protocol

24 1. Bjork, R.A., & Bjork, E.L. (1992). A new theory of disuse and an old theory of stimulus fluctuation. In A. Healy, S. Kosslyn, & R. Shiffrin (Eds.), From Learning Processes to Cognitive Processes: Essays in Honor of William K. Estes (Vol. 2, pp. 35-67). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. 2. Baddeley, A.D., & Longman, D.J.A. (1978). The influence of length and frequency of training session on the rate of learning to type. Ergonomics, 21, 627-635. Bjork, R.A. (1994). Memory and metamemory considerations in the training of human beings. In J. 3. Dempster, F.N. (1990). The spacing effect: A case study in the failure to apply the results of psychological research. American Psychologist, 43, 627-634. 4. Roediger, H.L., III, & Karpicke, J.D. (2006). The power of testing memory: Basic research and implications for educational practice. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 1, 181-120. 5. McDaniel, M.A., Hines, R.J., Waddill, P.J., & Einstein, G.O. (1994). What makes folk tales unique: Content familiarity, causal structure, scripts, or superstructures? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 20, 169-184. 6. Smith, S.M., & Glenberg, A., & Bjork, R.A. (1978). Environmental context and human memory. Memory & Cognition, 6, 342-353. 7. McNamara, D.S., Kintsch, E., Songer, N.B., & Kintsch, W. (1996). Are good texts always better? Interactions of text coherence, background knowledge, and levels of understanding in learning from text. Cognition and Instruction, 14, 1-43. 8. Diemand-Yauman, C., Oppenheimer, D.M., & Vaughan, E.B. (in press). Fortune favors the bold (and the italicized): Effects of disfluency on educational outcomes. Cognition.Cognition Ebbinghaus, H. (1964). Memory: A contribution to experimental psychology. (H.A. Ruger & C.E. Citations:

25 C O C H N H H H N N H H C C O O C C H H H N N H H C C O O C C H H O C C C CHH H H H H H CH CH 3 OH CH 2 OH CH 2 O O

26 C O C H N H H H N N H H C C O C H H O C O SH CH 3 CH 2

27 H N N H H C C O O C C H H H N N H H C C O O C C H H O C C CHH H H H H H CH CH 3 OH CH 2 OH H

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31 H H H H H H O OP OH C C C C C

32 H H H OPOP C C C O H H

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